Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

The Democrats can’t hide the president’s weakness

- Maureen Dowd is a columnist for The New York Times.

Once, when my father was in West Virginia on police business, a man approached him and demanded to know about “rumors” that President Franklin Roosevelt was “crippled.” The man threatened to beat up my father or anyone who said FDR was in a wheelchair.

My dad, a D.C. police detective, served on FDR’s protective detail. Like others around Roosevelt, he kept a tight lip about the paralysis of the president, who did not want to seem weak. Dad assured the West Virginia ruffian that Roosevelt was “a fine, athletic man.”

Can’t hide it anymore

In the days before TV and social media, the White House could suppress the fact that Roosevelt, who contracted polio when he was 39, could barely walk. With the help of a complicit press corps, a censoring Secret Service and a variety of ruses, FDR was even able to campaign giving the impression that he was mobile.

But stealth about health is no longer possible, and the sooner President Joe Biden’s team stops being in denial about that, the better off Democrats will be.

Jill Biden and his other advisers come up with ways to obscure signs of senescence — from shorter news conference­s to almost zero print interviews to TV interviews mainly with fawning MSNBC anchors. But many Americans are quite concerned about the 81-yearold president’s crepuscula­r mien. It’s the elephant in the room — except that elephants never forget.

Biden is running against a bad man, but that’s not enough. He has to acknowledg­e to himself that his moments of faltering — which will increase over the next five years — are a big weakness. He and his aides have to figure out how to handle that. Donald Trump, 77, makes his own verbal slips and shows signs of aging, but he conveys more energy.

When the president rushed out Thursday night to show he was compos mentis, rebutting what special counsel Robert Hur said, he was peevish with the media and blamed his staff for mishandlin­g classified documents. Petulance is never a good look. Biden should have taken a breath.

When CNN White House correspond­ent M.J. Lee asked about age concerns, Biden snapped: “That is your judgment. That is your judgment.” But 71% of battlegrou­nd state voters in one of our polls said

Biden is “too old to be an effective president.”

The crotchety grandpa

Pushing back at the image of a crotchety grandpa, he came across like a crotchety grandpa. “I’m well-meaning and I’m an elderly man, and I know what the hell I’m doing,” he barked.

Asked why he insists that he is the only Democrat who can defeat Trump, Biden shot back: “Because I am the most qualified person in this country to be president of the United States and finish the job I started.” That sounded disturbing­ly like Trump claiming, “I alone can fix it.”

Just when Biden was getting some breaks — the economy was better, Trump was still horrible, and the Republican­s in Congress were steeped in dreckitude — Hur took a whack out of the blue, leaving the impression that Biden shouldn’t have his finger on the button.

He said he wouldn’t bring charges because a jury would forgive Biden as a nice, forgetful, old man.

It was a mistake for Merrick Garland to make a Trump appointee the special counsel for Biden. Like James Comey, Garland is a man so in love with his own virtue that he bends over backward to show it off. I am so fair that I am going to be unfair.

Democrats often fall into this way of thinking, to their own detriment. That’s how Biden blew the Anita Hill-Clarence Thomas hearings, trying to be so fair to the win-at-allcosts Republican­s on the committee that he threw the game to Thomas, who is now staining the Supreme Court.

Still, the report was a fire alarm blaring in the capital because, fair or not, it crystalliz­ed the White House’s problem. Biden refused to take the one-term win, bow out and make room for new blood. So now he has to go to war with Trump and stop him from getting back into the Oval for his grotesque revenge rampage.

Can’t closet him

But, in a world on fire, with Republican­s in Congress spiraling into farce, the Biden crew clearly has no plan for how to deal with the president’s age except to shield him and hide him and browbeat reporters who point out that his mental state — like the delusional Trump’s — is a genuine issue.

Biden is not just in a bubble; he’s in bubble wrap. Cosseting and closeting Uncle Joe all the way to the end — eschewing town halls and the Super Bowl interview — are just not going to work. Going on defense, when Trump is on offense, is not going to work. Counting on Trump’s vileness to secure the win, as Hillary Clinton did, is not going to work.

Democrats should grab their smelling salts for a long case of the vapors. It’s going to be a most virulent, violent year.

 ?? Nathan Howard/Getty Images ?? President Joe Biden
Nathan Howard/Getty Images President Joe Biden

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